@@ -16,7 +16,7 @@ On Debian Lenny, for example, you can install xen-hypervisor-3.2-1-i386-nonpae.

If you have a free partition, you can fdisk to type 0x83, create a filesystem using:

- sudo mke2fs -b 4096 -I 128 -o hurd /dev/sda4

+ sudo mke2fs -b 4096 -I 128 -o hurd /dev/sda4

Replace /dev/sda4 with your partition. Install and use crosshurd to setup a GNU/Hurd system on this partition.

@@ -31,12 +31,12 @@ You can either get binaries at <http://youpibouh.thefreecat.org/hurd-xen/> or bu

Here is a sample /etc/xen/hurd configuration

- kernel = "/boot/gnumach-xen"

- memory = 256

- disk = ['phy:sda4,hda,w']

- extra = "root=device:hd0"

- vif = [ '' ]

- ramdisk = "/boot/hurd-modules"

+ kernel = "/boot/gnumach-xen"

+ memory = 256

+ disk = ['phy:sda4,hda,w']

+ extra = "root=device:hd0"

+ vif = [ '' ]

+ ramdisk = "/boot/hurd-modules"

- Run `xm create -c hurd`, gnumach should get started.

- If `xm` complains about networking (`vif could not be connected`), it's Xen scripts' fault, see Xen documentation for how to configure the network. The simplest way is network-bridge with fixed IPs (note that you need the bridge-utils package for this). You can also just disable networking by commenting the vif line in the config.